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Improving Kidney Care in Type 2 Diabetes: A Study of Pharmacist Prescribing Versus Usual Care

Improving Kidney Care in Type 2 Diabetes: A Study of Pharmacist Prescribing Versus Usual Care

Recruiting
18 years and older
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

Type 2 diabetes is the leading cause of chronic kidney disease, which can result in serious complications such as kidney failure and heart disease. Although effective medications exist to slow the progression of kidney damage, they are often underused in primary care, particularly for individuals without a regular family doctor. In response to this gap, 46 community pharmacy-led primary care clinics were launched across Nova Scotia in 2023 to serve under-resourced areas. Pharmacists at these clinics can prescribe for many chronic conditions, but currently not for diabetic kidney disease. To address this, the research team collaborated with kidney, diabetes, and primary care experts, patient partners and regulatory bodies to develop and validate step-by-step prescribing guide (called algorithms) that support pharmacists in identifying and managing diabetic kidney disease. All medications included are approved, publicly funded in Nova Scotia, target people with earlier categories of diabetic kidney disease and includebuilt-in safety monitoring, nurse practitioner consultation or referral to a kidney doctor. This study will evaluate whether these algorithms improve kidney protective medication use which have shown to be beneficial for people with diabetes and kidney disease. The investigators will recruit 120 adults with type 2 diabetes from a provincial diabetes registry who do not have a primary care provider and screen them at pharmacy clinics for diabetic kidney disease. Those eligible and who wish to participate will be randomly assigned to either an intervention group receiving pharmacist-led care using the algorithms or a control group receiving usual care through walk-in, mobile, or virtual clinics. The investigators will measure how many patients begin and continue recommended medications, as well as any medication-related side effects or hospitalizations. Pharmacist participants will also complete a survey to identify what helps or hinders implementation in real-world practice. This research is relevant because it aims to expand access to kidney-protective treatments for people with diabetes, especially those with early forms of diabetic kidney disease who do not have regular access to primary care provider, ultimately improving long-term health outcomes.

Description

Importance: Diabetes is the leading cause of kidney disease. However, the use of guideline directed medical treatments (GDMT) to slow kidney disease progression and reduce the risk of heart disease remains suboptimal. Health system solutions are urgently needed to optimize treatment for individuals with diabetic kidney disease (DKD). Since 2023, the government of Nova Scotia launched 46 community pharmacist-led primary care clinics (CPPCCs) in medically under served areas and expanded the pharmacist's scope of practice to include medication prescribing, either independently or in virtual consultation with another prescriber. In collaboration with regulatory authorities, the investigators developed and validated algorithms focused on GDMT for DKD to support community pharmacists in its management. As part of the initial implementation, the prescribing algorithms will be integrated into a digital health application familiar to pharmacists delivering care in pharmacy primary care clinics. Herein, the investigators propose a hybrid type 1 effectiveness-implementation study to determine if the pharmacist-led prescription algorithms improve the use of GDMT in pharmacy primary care clinics compared to usual care provided through a walk-in or mobile health clinic or virtual care.

Objectives: This feasibility pilot RCT specifically seeks to: 1) Examine the feasibility of implementing the pharmacist-led prescription algorithms for DKD GDMT based on the number of individuals newly initiated and adherent to at least one of renin-angiotensin system inhibitors (RASi), sodium glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitors (SGLT2i) and nonsteroidal mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists (nsMRA) at the end of the study; 2) Determine the feasibility of conducting a pivotal RCT of the pharmacist-led prescription algorithms versus usual care based on recruitment rates and loss to follow up; and 3) Identify barriers and facilitators to the implementation of the pharmacist-led prescription algorithms in CPPCCs.

Research Plan: The investigators propose a hybrid type 1 design, combining an open-label parallel-group randomized controlled trial of 120 participants to test the feasibility of implementing pharmacist-led GDMT prescribing algorithms versus usual care. There will be up to 46 CPPCCs participating in the trial, all of which will be trained to use the validated algorithms. Potential participants will be recruited over 12 months from a centralized registry maintained by the Diabetes Care Program Nova Scotia which includes a list of patients with diabetes not rostered to a family physician. From the registry, individuals identified as having T2D will be invited to participate and those agreeing to participate will undergo screening lab tests performed at a pharmacy clinic to collaboratively establish a new diagnosis or confirm a pre-existing diagnosis of DKD (eGFR \< 60 ml/min/1.73m2 and or UACR \> 3 mg/mmol, persistence for at least 3 months).

Eligible participants will be randomized 1:1 to immediate enrolment with a community pharmacy clinic (intervention group) versus usual care (control group) and followed for 12 months. Barriers and facilitators will be identified through an electronic survey administered to pharmacist participants to capture both individual-level factors and environmental/contextual factors affecting implementation. The outcome measures will be summarized using counts and percentages and compared using chi-square test. Logistic regression will be used to report odds ratio and 95% confidence interval. Additional multivariable models will look at the association between sex, gender, race and ethnicity with adherence rate.

Our primary hypothesis is that there will be a greater than 30% increase in the number of people on at least one new GDMT (RASi, SGLT2i, nsMRA) for DKD at 12 months using the provincial medication database.

Secondary hypotheses include: 1) more than 30% of participants meeting eligibility criteria will undergo consent and randomization; and 2) participant loss to follow-up rate of \<10% for study duration.

Study Significance: Population level interventions are needed to improve use of beneficial guideline-directed medical treatments. Validated pharmacist-led prescription algorithms offers an approach to improve DKD health care delivery and coordination of care.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Adults ≥18 years with T2D and DKD (eGFR≥ 30-60 ml/min/1.73m2 and/or UACR≥3 mg/mmol)
  • Adults who do not have primary care provider,
  • Adults who are eligible for initiation of treatment with RASi, SGLT2i or nsMRA

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Hypotension
  • Type 1 diabetes
  • History of allergy or intolerance to either, renin angiotensin system inhibitor (RASi), SGLT2 inhibitor (SGLT2i) and nonsteroidal mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist (nsMRA).
  • Already receiving all three medications: RASi, SGLT2i, and nsMRA .
  • Exceed algorithm thresholds for potassium levels or eGFR less than 30 mL/min/1.73m²
  • Limited life expectancy of less than 1 year
  • Followed by a subspecialty physician (e.g., nephrologist or endocrinologist)
  • Unable to give consent

Study details
    Diabetic Kidney Disease
    Type 2 Diabetes
    Chronic Kidney Disease

NCT07169422

Nova Scotia Health Authority

13 May 2026

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